“…The ability of an organism to mount a normal response to an antigen (i.e., immunocompetence) has been shown to fluctuate with environmental conditions and throughout ontogeny (Bakar et al, 2016; Love, Salvante, Dale, & Williams, 2008; Nelson & Demas, 1996; Sandland & Minchella, 2003). For example, empirical evidence suggests that season, sex, and hydration can all lead to inter‐ and intra‐individual variation in immunocompetence (Brusch, Christian, Brown, Shine, & DeNardo, 2019; Kelly, Stoehr, Nunn, Smyth, & Prokop, 2018; Walton, Weil, & Nelson, 2011; Zhang, Jin, Qu, & Caviedes‐Vidal, 2017). Despite previous research detailing the internal and external conditions which influence the immune system, there remain substantial gaps in our understanding of the biotic and abiotic factors that influence different components of the immune system in ecologically relevant contexts, including in free‐ranging animals (Viney, Riley, & Buchanan, 2005).…”